The Linux Kernel
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The Linux kernel user’s and administrator’s guide
Linux kernel release 4.x <http://kernel.org/>
The kernel’s command-line parameters
Linux allocated devices (4.x+ version)
L1TF - L1 Terminal Fault
Reporting bugs
Security bugs
Bug hunting
Bisecting a bug
Tainted kernels
Ramoops oops/panic logger
Dynamic debug
Explaining the dreaded “No init found.” boot hang message
Rules on how to access information in sysfs
Using the initial RAM disk (initrd)
Control Group v2
Linux Serial Console
Linux Braille Console
Parport
RAID arrays
Kernel module signing facility
Linux Magic System Request Key Hacks
Unicode support
Software cursor for VGA
Kernel Support for miscellaneous (your favourite) Binary Formats v1.1
Mono(tm) Binary Kernel Support for Linux
Java(tm) Binary Kernel Support for Linux v1.03
Reliability, Availability and Serviceability
A block layer cache (bcache)
ext4 General Information
Power Management
Power Management Strategies
System-Wide Power Management
Working-State Power Management
CPU Performance Scaling
intel_pstate
CPU Performance Scaling Driver
Thunderbolt
Linux Security Module Usage
Memory Management
如何撰写内核文档
Kernel Hacking Guides
Linux Tracing Technologies
Linux Memory Management Documentation
The Linux Kernel
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The Linux kernel user’s and administrator’s guide
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Power Management
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Working-State Power Management
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Working-State Power Management
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CPU Performance Scaling
The Concept of CPU Performance Scaling
CPU Performance Scaling in Linux
CPUFreq
Policy Objects
CPU Initialization
Policy Interface in
sysfs
Generic Scaling Governors
Frequency Boost Support
intel_pstate
CPU Performance Scaling Driver
General Information
Operation Modes
Turbo P-states Support
Processor Support
User Space Interface in
sysfs
intel_pstate
vs
acpi-cpufreq
Kernel Command Line Options for
intel_pstate
Diagnostics and Tuning
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